This past weekend was the first production day for the
documentary that Shai and I are working on, and I am already starting to see
how documentary filmmaking is different than fiction. In the past, I have only
worked on scripted videos, translating stories on the screen that have been
thoroughly planned out on the page. With this project, I’m learning how
documentary stories can evolve to make themselves become more clear throughout
the process. What began as a short documentary about a person doing good became
a call to action for a movement of doing good, and this weekend, I could start
to see the direction by which we are going to tell the story.
Friday afternoon, Shai and I hit the road to Virginia to
shoot our main interview with James Orrigo, the founder of Lad In A Battle and
the subject of our film. Just before we left, he called us about another person
we could interview for the film, his college guidance counselor, Christine, who
had seen him and his movement grow. She
was only an hour’s drive from his home in Virgina, and had a house on Lake
Anna, a potentially great interview location. Yet as much as Shai and I were
tantalized by the idea of the waterfront backdrop, we knew that it wouldn’t
serve our story enough to justify the sound problems it came with.
During her interview, Christine talked about the problem of
living one’s life in fear. Fear for the future, for grades, for school, for
money. The problem with fear is that it prevents us being happy and from fully
embracing the world with love. As I listened through my headphones, watched the
microphones levels, and thought about her words, I started to realize how this
video was going to take shape. James made a choice back when he got a
concussion in high school from lacrosse that nearly killed him; he could either
live the rest of his life in fear of the world, or embrace it with love. Immediately after the interview, Christine invited us all out on her boat in Lake Anna, and we Shai and i made the conscious choice to live by the new words of our film. In fact, this
could be the angle by which we tackle the rest of the film.
What does it mean to embrace the world with love? It means
reaching out to people, it means doing what makes you happy, doing what makes
others happy, and finding a way to balance those out everyday. What James does
with music for children and the music he played for his mother during her
cancer, is his way of bridging what makes those around him happy and what makes
him happy. What became even more clear during James’ interview is that
something about him and the Lad In A Battle movement is infectious. Early on
when he just started Lad In A Battle, he had an idea to get from VA to ME
without a car by relying on people along the coast who liked his message and
sell t-shirts along the way. James had a choice: to live his life in fear, or
in love. The success of this trip and the effects it had on propelling his
movement demonstrated the power of this idea that Christine had talked about.
Especially at a time when our lives are moving so fast. There is so much
pressure for the future, to get good grades to go to a good school to get a
good job to have money. Yet James choice to follow his heart and live his life
in love for others and now he and his wife are gearing up to build a tiny house
on the back of trailer to tour hospitals across the country, all in hopes to
kick start his Out Of The Music Box program for children with cancer. Despite the battles underneath, he’s living
his life in love, not in fear, and this is something that we can all do. This
is not the way I had thought to tell his story, but now I am realizing that
with documentary’s, they like to tell their own stories and we have to guide
them.
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